It's actually very simple, once you learn not to sniff deeply and take the snuff into the throat. A bit of it on your thumbnail and hold it to your nostril and inhale normally, and it's done. The menthol and the lemon snuffs caused a bit more sneezing than the clove snuff, which didn't cause sneezing at all once I learned the trick. As I said, though, the effect was negligible, so I guess I might try a pipe or pipe-tobacco cigar next.

About thirty-five years ago, there was a sugar-snuff that came in little tins. I think there was a variety of flavors, strawberry seems familiar. As I recall, the target audience was coke fiends, I guess. I just remember all my friends trying it and sneezing sugar-snot all over their shirt fronts. It was a great way to impress the young ladies.

I remember Cökesnuff. There were a few other brands too. I loved the little psychedelic, 70s-style tins it came in—oh wait, I guess it was the 70s. There were also tobacco snuffs too. My favorites were the vanilla Cökesnuff and a licorice tobacco snuff. Go figure. I used to like the licorice papers, too.

Patchouli? C'mon, who'd want to sniff that? I bet that was more like "Achoo-li".

I was thinking along similar lines, except for all flavors. I can beat that on ridiculous cocaine-advertising products though:

Weeds are flowers too, once you get to know them. - Eeyore from Winnie the PoohAnimals are something invented by plants to move seeds around. An extremely yang solution to a peculiar problem which they faced. - Terence McKennaA question that sometimes drives me hazy: am I or are the others crazy? - Albert Einstein